학술논문

Variations in External and Internal Microbial Populations in Shell Eggs during Extended Storage.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Food Protection. Dec2004, Vol. 67 Issue 12, p2657-2660. 4p. 2 Graphs.
Subject
*MICROORGANISM populations
*EGG quality
*MICROBIAL contamination
*MOLECULAR population biology
*COGNITION disorders
*BIOLOGICAL decontamination
Language
ISSN
0362-028X
Abstract
The current project was conducted to determine the microbial quality of commercially processed shell eggs during extended storage. Unwashed eggs were collected at the accumulator before entering the processing line. Washed eggs were retrieved after placement in flats. All eggs were stored on pulp flats at 4°C for 10 weeks. Twelve eggs from each treatment were rinsed on the day of collection and during each week of storage. After rinsing, eggs were sanitized in ethanol, and contents were aseptically collected. Total acrobes, yeasts and molds, Enterobacteriaceae, and pseudomonads were enumerated from shell rinses and pooled egg contents. During storage, no differences were found between unwashed and washed eggs for Enterobacteriaceae and pseudomonads in either shell rinses or contents. No differences were found between treatments for population levels of total aerobes or yeasts and molds in the egg contents throughout the storage period. Significant differences between treatments were found at each week of storage for external shell contamination by total aerobes. The highest unwashed egg contamination occurred at week 8 of storage and the lowest was at weeks 0 and 1 of storage. The highest shell contamination with aerobic bacteria on the washed eggs was found at week 0 of storage and the lowest was at week 7. Yeast and mold contamination determined by shell rinses was also significantly different between treatments at each week of storage. Commercially washed eggs were significantly less contaminated than were unwashed eggs for the populations monitored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]